If you’re planning a renovation in Toronto this year, you’ve probably noticed the conversation has changed. It’s not just about new countertops or a fresh coat of paint anymore. Homeowners across the GTA are renovating with a longer-term mindset – thinking about energy bills, resale value, rental income, and how their space actually functions day to day.
At Jacko Contracting, we’re on job sites across Toronto and the GTA every week. These are the trends we’re seeing most in 2026 – along with honest numbers on what they cost and what they’re worth.
Legal Basement Suites Are the Highest-ROI Renovation in Toronto
If there’s one trend defining 2026, it’s this one. With Toronto’s updated multiplex zoning rules now allowing up to four units as-of-right in most low-rise residential zones, finishing a basement into a fully legal secondary suite has become the single best return-on-investment renovation available to GTA homeowners.
Here’s why it matters:
- A legal basement suite typically costs $80,000 to $140,000+ depending on size, finishes, and whether underpinning is required.
- A compliant one-bedroom suite in Toronto rents for roughly $2,100 to $2,600 per month in 2026.
- Many homeowners see their renovation pay for itself within 5 to 7 years through rental income alone, plus a meaningful jump in appraised home value.
- Unpermitted suites can actually hurt your resale value – buyers and lawyers increasingly ask for proof of a closed permit before closing.
The catch is that “legal” isn’t optional – it’s the whole point. A legal suite needs proper egress windows, fire separation, ceiling height of at least 1.95 metres, interconnected smoke alarms, and a permit through the City of Toronto.
This is exactly the kind of project our team works on regularly – framing, drywall, egress windows, and all the code-compliant details that turn an unused basement into real living space and real income.
Warmer, Layered Interiors Are Replacing Cold Minimalism
For years, grey and white dominated Toronto interiors. In 2026, that’s shifting. Homeowners are choosing warmer, more grounded palettes – deep greens, charcoal, navy, and wood tones – paired with layered lighting instead of one overhead fixture doing all the work.
This shows up most in kitchens and bathrooms, where natural stone, warm wood accents, and softer neutrals are replacing the stark white-on-white look. It’s a small shift in material choice that makes a big difference in how a renovated space feels to live in, especially through Toronto’s long winters.
Open-Concept Layouts, With a Catch
Open-concept kitchens and living areas are still popular in 2026, especially in Toronto’s narrower lots and older homes where extra daylight makes a real difference. But homeowners are getting smarter about how they open up a space.
Instead of removing every wall, many are creating “defined zones” within an open layout. If you’re considering this in an older Toronto home, keep in mind that load-bearing walls require a structural engineer and a permit – so have that conversation with your contractor early.
Kitchens and Bathrooms Still Deliver the Best Everyday ROI
Basement suites get attention for income potential, but kitchen and bathroom renovations remain the most reliable way to add resale value to a Toronto home:
- A minor kitchen renovation typically returns 75% to 100% of its cost at resale.
- A bathroom renovation typically returns 70% to 85%.
- Buyers in the GTA now expect quartz countertops, frameless glass showers, and pot lighting as standard features – not upgrades.
Bathrooms have shifted from purely functional spaces to small wellness retreats. Heated floors, curbless showers, and wall-mounted vanities are now showing up in mid-range renovations, not just luxury builds.
Sustainability Is Now the Default, Not the Upgrade
Energy-efficient windows, better insulation, low-VOC finishes, and responsibly sourced materials have moved from “nice to have” to expected in 2026. This isn’t only about the environment – it directly affects your monthly utility bills and your home’s long-term value.
For basement renovations specifically, proper insulation and ventilation can cut Ontario heating costs by 12% to 18%.
Multi-Functional Spaces Are a Requirement, Not a Bonus
Whether it’s a basement that works as a home gym during the week and a guest suite on weekends, or a home office that converts into a bedroom, flexible space planning is now central to how Toronto homeowners renovate. With home prices what they are in the GTA, adding adaptable square footage to an existing home is often more realistic than moving.
What This Means for Your Renovation
If you’re planning a project in 2026, here’s the practical takeaway: don’t just choose finishes based on what looks good in photos. Think about how the space will function, what it could be worth at resale, and whether it could generate income.
A legal basement suite, a well-planned kitchen, or a bathroom refresh with the right materials can all deliver strong returns – but only when the work is done properly, permitted correctly, and built to last.
At Jacko Contracting, we handle every part of that process – design, permits, construction, and final inspection – so you get a renovation that holds up and holds its value.
Thinking about a renovation in Toronto or the GTA this year? Call us at 647-642-4664 or visit jackocontracting.com for a free estimate. We’re available 24/7.




